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停泊在中美港口船只压载舱沉积物中发现休眠孢囊及其对物种地理分布和潜在入侵的影响

Resting Cysts Detected in the Ballast Tank Sediment of Ships Arriving in the Ports of China and North America and the Implications in the Species' Geographic Distribution and Possible Invasion.

机构信息

CAS Key Laboratory of Marine Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Qingdao 266071, China.

Laboratory for Marine Ecology and Environmental Science, Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology, Qingdao 266237, China.

出版信息

Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Dec 28;19(1):299. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19010299.

Abstract

Over the past several decades, much attention has been focused on the dispersal of aquatic nonindigenous species via ballast tanks of shipping vessels worldwide. The recently reclassified dinoflagellate (previously identified as sp., , or ) was not reported in China until 2006. However, algal blooming events caused by this organism have been reported almost every year since then in the Pearl River Estuary and its adjacent areas in China. Whether is an indigenous or an invasive species has thus become an ecological question of great scientific and practical significance. In this study, we collected the sediments from ballast tanks of ships arriving in the ports of China and North America and characterized dinoflagellate resting cysts via a combined approach. We germinated two dark brownish cysts from the tank of an international ship (Vessel A) arriving at the Jiangyin Port (China) into vegetative cells and identified them as by light and scanning electron microscopy and phylogenetic analyses for partial LSU rDNA sequences. We also identified cyst from the ballast tank sediment of a ship (Vessel B) arriving in the port of North America via single-cyst PCR and cloning sequencing, which indicated that this species could be transported as resting cyst via ship. Since phylogenetic analyses based on partial LSU rDNA sequences could not differentiate all sequences among our cysts from those deposited in the NCBI database into sub-groups, all populations from China, Australia, Japan, and the original sources from which the cysts in the two vessels arrived in China and North America were carried over appeared to share a very recent common ancestor, and the species may have experienced a worldwide expansion recently. These results indicate that cysts may have been extensively transferred to many regions of the world via ships' ballast tank sediments. While our work provides an exemplary case for both the feasibility and complexity (in tracking the source) of the bio-invasion risk via the transport of live resting cysts by ship's ballast tanks, it also points out an orientation for future investigation.

摘要

在过去的几十年中,人们对通过全球航运船舶的压载舱来分散水生非本地物种给予了高度关注。直到 2006 年,最近重新分类的甲藻(以前被鉴定为 sp., sp.,或 sp.)才在中国被报道。然而,自那时以来,该生物在中国珠江口及其周边地区几乎每年都会引发藻类大量繁殖事件。因此,是否为入侵物种已成为一个具有重要科学和实际意义的生态问题。在这项研究中,我们收集了抵达中国和北美的船舶压载舱中的沉积物,并通过综合方法对甲藻休眠孢进行了特征描述。我们从一艘国际船舶(船舶 A)的压载舱中萌发了两个深褐色的休眠孢,将其转化为营养细胞,并通过光镜和扫描电子显微镜以及部分 LSU rDNA 序列的系统发育分析鉴定为 。我们还通过单孢 PCR 和克隆测序鉴定了一艘抵达北美的船舶(船舶 B)压载舱沉积物中的 休眠孢,这表明该物种可以通过船舶的休眠孢来进行运输。由于基于部分 LSU rDNA 序列的系统发育分析无法将我们的休眠孢序列与 NCBI 数据库中已保存的序列区分成亚群,因此来自中国、澳大利亚、日本以及船舶抵达中国和北美的原始来源地的所有种群似乎都与一个非常近的共同祖先共享,该物种可能最近在全球范围内扩散。这些结果表明,休眠孢可能通过船舶的压载舱沉积物广泛传播到世界许多地区。虽然我们的工作为通过船舶压载舱运输活休眠孢来追踪生物入侵风险的可行性和复杂性(在追踪来源方面)提供了一个范例,但也指出了未来研究的方向。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/ab92/8751027/be987e010b94/ijerph-19-00299-g001.jpg

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